Obama Is The Greatest Force for Equality in 50 Years

Camille

Kitchen Wench #TeamQuaid
Staff member
There are graphs at the source link that didn't embed.

http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2016/09/obamas-war-on-inequality/501620


Thanks, Obama

The historic—and underrated—economic record of the 44th president

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President Obama has cultivated a reputation for approaching politics with a kind of medical clinicism. He is philosophical rather than action-oriented; cold, not bold. It is a reputation that dogged him even in his earliest days on the campaign trail, back when he was running far behind his future secretary of state in the Democratic Primary.

But with the full panorama of his presidency coming into view, Obama’s economic legacy is impressive, even historic. To extend the medical metaphor, Obama has played the part of stoic surgeon in the E.R. His demeanor is rarely anything but placid. But with the operations drawing to a close, the body politic, once in critical condition, has dramatically improved thanks to several targeted interventions.

A new examination from the Council of Economic Advisers credits the Obama presidency for the most aggressive and successful attempt to reduce inequality in half a century. “President Obama has overseen the largest increase in federal investment to reduce inequality since the Great Society,” the economists write.



One might immediately think to dismiss such a report as shameless self-promotion from the White House. But the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO) reached the exact same conclusion in June. It found that the federal government is doing more to reduce inequality right now than any time on record, going back at least 35 years. The gap between the rich and poor is as wide as ever judging by before-tax income (e.g., wages and capital gains). But judging by after-tax income, the CBO found that income inequality is no higher than it was in 2000, and Obama’s policies have done more to reduce inequality in the last few years than any other time on record.*

In other words, Obama’s economic policies have fought the stubborn forces of economic inequality to something of standstill. How has he done it? President Obama’s anti-inequality crusade has three main pillars.

First, the centerpiece of Obama’s anti-inequality legacy is the policy that bears his name. Obamacare, a.k.a., the Affordable Care Act, has reduced the uninsured rate from about 16 percent in 2010 to less than 9 percent today, the lowest level in U.S. history. Health insurance is not yet universal, but it is in the process of universalizing, thanks to the president’s landmark bill.

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CEA
Obama’s health care reform increased coverage primarily through several channels, expanding Medicaid for the poor, subsidizing private insurance plans for the middle class, and allowing young people to stay on their parents’ plans until they turn 27. Indeed, the largest reduction in the uninsured was among young people between 19 and 26. But perhaps this is the law’s greatest achievement: The uninsured rate among families living in poverty or just above the poverty line fell by almost 50 percent.

It is tricky to determine the “average” benefit of a health care plan, since unlike a tax credit, health care spending is, by definition, uncertain and spiky. Sick people need immediate and expensive care, while healthy individuals sometimes goes years without seeing a doctor or visiting a hospital. But there are some acceptable estimates. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services has calculated that the average expenses covered by Medicaid under Obamacare next year will be about $5,400—or, about 15 percent of household income for a family of four at the threshold of Medicaid eligibility. The CBO estimated that the average benefit of individuals receiving subsidized coverage is $4,500.

Second, several subtle yet significant tax changes under Obama have made the tax code more progressive. The stimulus bill passed in 2009, a.k.a., the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (or, simply, the Recovery Act), included the most important changes. The law created the Making Work Pay credit, expanded the Earned Income Tax Credit and Child Tax Credit, and created new tax credits, like the American Opportunity Tax Credit for college attendees. Most of these measures have been extended through 2017. The most significant change to the tax code since 2010 has been the eleventh-hour agreement to extend the Bush tax cuts for all families except for an increase in the top tax rate for households making more than $450,000 and an increase in the estate tax rate to 40 percent.


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Third, the Obama administration has supported initiatives outside of the tax code and health care policy to help the poor and middle class. They have been advocates for higher minimum wages at the national level, which have arguably buoyed the state-by-state effort to raise minimum wages toward $15 in richer areas. They supported extended unemployment benefits while long-term unemployment was perhaps the country’s most insidious economic plague. Unemployment insurance kept more than 11 million people out of poverty in Obama’s first term, according to Census analysis. The president also expanded Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (food stamps) and Temporary Aid to Needy Families (grants that states can use for a variety of measures including helping the poor). His Department of Education spent more than $60 billion to support states’ education budgets and prevent more layoffs of teachers and administrators. In sum, he grew anti-inequality spending more than any president, as a share of GDP.

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CEA
It is easy to see an anti-inequality policy as a straightforward transfer from the lifelong rich to lifelong long. But life is long, and some people who start off middle-class become rich, while many people who are well off go through periods of need. For this reason, looking at a single year of taxes and transfers provides a limited and obstructed view of the expansive security of the social safety net that Obama’s policies have buttressed.

In 2006, just 20 percent of Americans under the age of 65 were uninsured for at least one month, but more than twice that many Americans had been uninsured for at least one month in the previous ten years. Even more powerfully: Sixty percent of Americans will fall into the bottom 20 percent of income for at least one year between their 20s and 60s. In a country where the majority of Americans are members of the “bottom 20 percent” at some point in their lives, it makes little sense to think of a permanent class of makers and a permanent class of takers. Americans are, rather, all interlocking parts of a vast social lattice of support, where security from misfortune is paid out of the pockets of the fortunate.

One of the loudest arguments against a strong social safety net is that so much technocratic tinkering may have a detrimental effect on the U.S. economy. For example, many Republicans warned that Obamacare would be a job killer that would sink the economy into the fresh hell of a double-dip recession.


But it hasn’t quite turned out that way. Private sector jobs have grown for 77 consecutive months, an American record. This month's Census data, one of the final report cards on Obama’s presidency, was historic in its optimism. It found that real median household incomes rose by 5.2 percent in 2015, also a record. Poorest Americans are seeing the fastest wage growth of all groups, not to mention the fastest wage growth they’ve ever experienced. After years of stagnation, average real wages are up nearly 6 percent since 2012, “more than all wage growth from 1973-2007,” according to the CEA.

Obama’s impressive achievements do not obviate the last few disappointing decades for American workers. But despite the Trump campaign’s creative take on time and causality, Obama shouldn’t be held accountable for economic trends that predate his presidency.

In fact, he probably shouldn’t even be held accountable for the economy when he is president. Overseeing the U.S. economy is not like building a ship, in which the president would theoretically serve as lead architect, with a blueprint and construction budget. It is more like sailing that ship through turbulent waters, where the president serves as master and commander but has little power to turn off the rain or request a calmer sea. Obama entered the White House with the vessel sinking and the rain coming in sideways; almost every economist agrees that his administration’s response helped to prevent a catastrophe.

“While presidents can’t control how fast the economy grows, they have more influence over how that growth is divided,” wrote Ben Casselman, an economics writer at FiveThirtyEight. That’s true, yet it undersells just how difficult it has become for a president in a divided Congress to create, enact, and defend an economic agenda.

A president’s legacy is always a matter of debate. Liberal historians may look back on the Obama administration and wonder why he didn’t push for a larger stimulus; break up the banks and roll back the financialization of the economy; empower unions; or take on corporate monopolists. Conservative historians will surely find parallel faults with his economic policy, from the weaknesses of Obamacare to his “war” on coal.

But at a time when both liberals and conservatives have become exquisitely aware of income inequality and its ills, the seemingly placid, cold, philosopher-in-chief did more to combat that inequity than any president in at least 50 years. For that, two words suffice: “Thanks, Obama.”


http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2016/09/obamas-war-on-inequality/501620
 
One might immediately think to dismiss such a report as shameless self-promotion from the White House. But the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO) reached the exact same conclusion in June. It found that the federal government is doing more to reduce inequality right now than any time on record, going back at least 35 years. The gap between the rich and poor is as wide as ever judging by before-tax income (e.g., wages and capital gains). But judging by after-tax income, the CBO found that income inequality is no higher than it was in 2000, and Obama’s policies have done more to reduce inequality in the last few years than any other time on record.*

I feel certain this will be attacked on every front; analyzed from every point of view; criticized by most every critic; and we'll see how that shakes out.

But meanwhile, Thank You, Sir.


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I have not read this but the world's best kept secret is that "OUR HEALTH IS OUR ONLY REAL WEALTH" anything else is borrowed including our lives. We are talking about a system that gets paid for control of the masses not for salvation. For blacks there is no way out but separation. Without truth and our true identity we will only be niggas, nothings, and poor junkies. I have not seen the millions of homeless get a chance to breath free. Libya was a country that had no homeless. The masses are having to work harder and harder to accomplish nothing. While the rich white crooks and terrorist live like Gods. And it is all because of a system of madness. Whites (10 percent) know that our life in the "GARDEN OF EDEN" was perfect. So they will continue to poison the water, food, air, etc. These demons in us and the appearance of them (whites) around us will always have the control until somebody over comes it.
Obama is an example of a well behaved so called black. The love of a black man that does not speak with a black dialect. In Jonestown they had everybody go up to the clinic every day to take their daily vitamins. They were not daily vitamins but psychotic drugs. Today they do not have to poison us they have taught us to poison ourselves. And to never separate from the programming. And to give to them and their visions and reality and never do for self and kind.
 
Obama got ol crackers across America

Still trying to figure out how the he'll that happend..

To this very day

They are fucking bewildered

The ones that didn't have heart failures
 
I feel certain this will be attacked on every front; analyzed from every point of view; criticized by most every critic; and we'll see how that shakes out.

But meanwhile, Thank You, Sir.


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Thanks for taking the time to embed the graphs for me! I appreciate it. :yes:
 
Obama is an example of a well behaved so called black. The love of a black man that does not speak with a black dialect.

I thought I had learned long ago that some things are just best left alone. Perhaps, I haven't learned that lesson very well.
Not sure I understand the above.
 
I thought I had learned long ago that some things are just best left alone. Perhaps, not.
Not sure I understand the above.
A time is coming when we no longer have to be a carbon copy of theses slave masters (whites) to be successful. The visions and goals and ways of life are those that are contrary to our true nature. It is like blackness and self control is a crime.
I live in Alabama and I know for a fact the more things seem to change the more they are really the same. If Alabama has changed blacks would be owing it and running it. But instead white ideas, white values, a white reality, and cold blooded white crooks.
Every president put into office they reveal to them secrets about black people. Jesus was a black man that had them stunned for a while. It was hard to keep mastering people when some real truth popped up all of a sudden.
Obama does not talk like he is one of us. He is there to promote a system of madness and encourage others that whites and their reality is not what is destroying the earth and the black race. Almost like Mandela being used to keep the country and the wealth of the country in the hands and control of white killers of blacks.
 
We have a relaxed way of talking. He talks in a way of representing the people that control him. What he represents is powerful because we built it up instead of doing for self. During slavery there was no choice. But we are guided to keep going in that direction.
 
We have a relaxed way of talking. He talks in a way of representing the people that control him. What he represents is powerful because we built it up instead of doing for self. During slavery there was no choice. But we are guided to keep going in that direction.


This is sort of a sore spot for me because I've always been teased about how I speak, but regarding Obama, he doesn't have a choice other than to be deliberate and measured. He has to weigh all his words carefully, because when he speaks he is being recorded and what he says will be replayed, dissected, and analyzed over and over again. He also has to relay complex thoughts and ideas that may be simple to him in a way that millions of people with different educational levels and backgrounds and varying levels of understanding and knowledge on a subject over a wide range of topics. Some people see that as calculating, but I just think he is thoughtful in his responses. Far too many other people are reckless with their words.
 
This is sort of a sore spot for me because I've always been teased about how I speak, but regarding Obama, he doesn't have a choice other than to be deliberate and measured. He has to weigh all his words carefully, because when he speaks he is being recorded and what he says will be replayed, dissected, and analyzed over and over again. He also has to relay complex thoughts and ideas that may be simple to him in a way that millions of people with different educational levels and backgrounds and varying levels of understanding and knowledge on a subject over a wide range of topics. Some people see that as calculating, but I just think he is thoughtful in his responses. Far too many other people are reckless with their words.
That is true what you said. It would be the same if I rose to power in building a nation for blacks here in the dirty south. They will look for reasons to tear down complete separation. In Obama case they will always say that he only has his position because of the whiteness in him. Herman Cain ran for president in 2012. He himself should have known he was not going to get it. His hair and skin will always keep him from ever winning. They had asked Dr. King if he thought he would be the first black president. Dr. King said he would not take the position even if they offered it to him. Cynthia McKinney ran in 2008 even after Israel had tried to kill her and had her arrested. She spent 7 days in prison there. Another country forced Israel to let her go. The same when she went on a humanitarian trip to Gaza strip. They found out and attacked the boat she was on. War ships from another country came to save her. I thought she was going to try to run this time. Right now they do not want her in front of any cameras unless she is being broken down.
Clarence Thomas was to take Thurgood Marshal place but some felt even though he had a white wife he was to black for the job. They must have paid Anita Hill for claim of sexual harassment. Clarence Thomas explained it as high tech lynching.
There was a reason why we were rejected from a white world at first. Now we are accepted because of being carbon copies of the white devils. Separation and blacks becoming themselves again is there greatest fear.
 
That is true what you said. It would be the same if I rose to power in building a nation for blacks here in the dirty south. They will look for reasons to tear down complete separation. In Obama case they will always say that he only has his position because of the whiteness in him. Herman Cain ran for president in 2012. He himself should have known he was not going to get it. His hair and skin will always keep him from ever winning. They had asked Dr. King if he thought he would be the first black president. Dr. King said he would not take the position even if they offered it to him. Cynthia McKinney ran in 2008 even after Israel had tried to kill her and had her arrested. She spent 7 days in prison there. Another country forced Israel to let her go. The same when she went on a humanitarian trip to Gaza strip. They found out and attacked the boat she was on. War ships from another country came to save her. I thought she was going to try to run this time. Right now they do not want her in front of any cameras unless she is being broken down.
Clarence Thomas was to take Thurgood Marshal place but some felt even though he had a white wife he was to black for the job. They must have paid Anita Hill for claim of sexual harassment. Clarence Thomas explained it as high tech lynching.
There was a reason why we were rejected from a white world at first. Now we are accepted because of being carbon copies of the white devils. Separation and blacks becoming themselves again is there greatest fear.


Hermain Cain was not too black, he was too stupid about politics. He may be able to run a business, but like Ben Carson, politics was over his head. Black people have no problem supporting black people who are competent. We are unfortunately hyperaware of being judged collectively instead of individually. (Let a black person get in there and eff up and they will never hire another black person again). So black folks are not going to back someone who will embarrass us. (I hate to say that because that is a pet peeve of mine. It's my belief that we won't be able to stop being judged and defined collectively unless and until we diversify our image, and that includes the clowns as well as more sophisticated representatives, but it's currently that's the mindset for the most part.) Besides he was a republican. If you recall Obama had to win black folks over. Even after he convinced people he could do the job, many older people didn't want to see him run because they thought he would be killed while in office. I don't have a problem with McKinney, though some would probably say she was not polished enough. I'm sorry, but I believed Anita Hill. I remember watching part of the hearings when they were on. Thomas has done some shady things around fundraising, if I recall correctly, and I think his wife was associated with the teaparty. All skinfolk aren't kinfolk. It's hard to get a read on him professionally because he isn't as outspoken as the other judges, and has gone as long as 10 years without even asking a question. He votes conservatively tho.
 
Hermain Cain was not too black, he was too stupid about politics. He may be able to run a business, but like Ben Carson, politics was over his head. Black people have no problem supporting black people who are competent. We are unfortunately hyperaware of being judged collectively instead of individually. (Let a black person get in there and eff up and they will never hire another black person again). So black folks are not going to back someone who will embarrass us. (I hate to say that because that is a pet peeve of mine. It's my belief that we won't be able to stop being judged and defined collectively unless and until we diversify our image, and that includes the clowns as well as more sophisticated representatives, but it's currently that's the mindset for the most part.) Besides he was a republican. If you recall Obama had to win black folks over. Even after he convinced people he could do the job, many older people didn't want to see him run because they thought he would be killed while in office. I don't have a problem with McKinney, though some would probably say she was not polished enough. I'm sorry, but I believed Anita Hill. I remember watching part of the hearings when they were on. Thomas has done some shady things around fundraising, if I recall correctly, and I think his wife was associated with the teaparty. All skinfolk aren't kinfolk. It's hard to get a read on him professionally because he isn't as outspoken as the other judges, and has gone as long as 10 years without even asking a question. He votes conservatively tho.
What it is, is that we live in 2 different worlds. I do not know if Herman knew what to do or not. But of course you do not want anyone to make the race look bad. But people like me are revolutionaries. We want nothing short of complete separation.
I checked Cynthia McKinney. She is very bold and very serious about doing what is right. I feel she did not get the support from blacks that she deserved. She tried to force the media to tell the truth about Libya. I first found out that the so called rebels were committing genocide on the blacks in Libya from her. She put her life on the line and was not backed up properly.
At a certain time in life I found out that black nationalist like Elijah Muhammad were totally right. Right now whites want to kill us. And they want to make money off of our death process. We have got to build for self and be prepared to protect what ever we accomplish.
 
But people like me are revolutionaries. We want nothing short of complete separation.

ON, aren't there others (Black Like Us) who brand themselves "revolutionaries" who do not aspire to "complete separation."

Are they no less black, no less revolutionary, with no less care/concern about US ???
 
ON, aren't there others (Black Like Us) who brand themselves "revolutionaries" who do not aspire to "complete separation."

Are they no less black, no less revolutionary, with no less care/concern about US ???
There is no overtaking of evil unless we completely separate. They should know that. Either you side with falsehood and the oppressor against the oppressed. Or you separate. There is no in between. Elijah Muhammad was totally right when he said whites are devils. There minds are filled with falsehood. The 10 percent that control the masses know a lot of the truth but they practice in secrecy and are the bloodsuckers of the poor. They have their rich lives because of this.
 
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